The Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, October 29, 1915 Page: 9 of 12
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V !
■tlOCRAT-VOICK. « OLKMAN, TEXAS
HIE Dl
uAV, OCTOBER 29, 1915.
iris and
Import More
Save the 1
Let’s
More Goods Have Arrived
We have just received a big shipment of
the latest goods—merchandise ’fejiat you will
i • x T l r\ * lll\* 1*.
NoricJtrj:°*27-1W0-
Editor Democrat-VW October 22m, ,
n30Ur l8*U® °\ page eight in
noticed an article o| thgt Coloman
which it la auggo«te*|(| n ^
county farm ere M u JLwpoeiolly
bird* on th«*»r
1°^' .. , k to ink of nothing
At thin into I nn,ra 01Itj I
more important t£* t.Vo|ce that
agree with The IteirC.*. t tho qmal
*1 farmers should pro! if ibK
they have, and in additir* nr# bad,y
import more quail, as trl
needed. \nicatibn on
I also noticed a comm'l,,,„• on
page ten signed by A C. l, Wu„i8
the same subject, only -.If ,
says farmers should nddi- J
Hnd chickens. ; v
This, also, is a goodidtl !lv„-the
opinion and if farmers will 1L‘V moro
quail they have, import mail,, tur.
and add more poultry, cspecfat,^ ,e!)S
keys, our crop of weevil wik I more>
and the crop of money will hel t,lort
A few days ago I noticed at, •
piece in The Democrat-Voice in lfnrni
it was said that eveiy quail ori al j
was worth fl a year to that fail ,, b
do not doubt it, but just now I tlt|an
each quail would be worth more tlll(,r
a dollar per year. I noticed anon,in
piece in your paper which said \
Ernth county farmer had a fair cri
of cotton, due to the many quail cl
his farm, while his neighbors, whl
had few or no quail, had an overplus
a very short cottpn1
need in November—Deptpclabl
and low in price—In these late t
u are look
rnvals you
OST o( us are interested ii
the roaring flasK«*kthe
’ quick dash of tsptfcd t
of the aeroplane, f
you will find fcvhat
New Fi
mming
We have just received a qig lot of this pop
ular trimming in whito* htown and blacl
mg sweep
The bf/ced
thaa the spectacwr to
tomobile, tractq
In order to
aft urUffect more
who owns ao au-
Briven engine,
dii^Tigh speed,
unce of Power
>e Utilized
IML0*
fejtyr auto racers, fast motorboat
drivers, and prominent aviators choose Texaco
Motor Oil.
Texaco Motor Oil has shown these people how a
high grade lubricant saves power.
You owners of gasoline engines will soon find
that Texaco Motor Oil means saving of power,
smaller fuel bills, a belief day’s work, and no
trouble from cylinder wear or soiling of spa*k plugs.
Get some from the Texaco agent in yolr town.
He carries a full line of Texaco Qqality Products.
jgjr . THE TEXAS COMPLY
General Office*: Houston, T*x**. Agent* Everywhere
ular trimming in whitq*
'■gT&Tp*'' All the new colors in cor-
% 9070 duro^i and velvet 75c, $1
Extm Values Ladas’ Hand Bags
We made a special buy^on ladies new-
est Hand Bags Jnd have marked them
way below tHe regular prices—a big
saving for you—We have them from
5oc to $4.00.
More New Suits for Ladies
Another shipment of the new Fall Suits
have arrived—suits thatWe moderate in
price—$ 12.50, $13.50, $15.00, $18.50.
■New Ribbons, Sweaters, Fur Neck Ties
Blankets and Comforts
of weevil and
crop.
Now if quail arc good to destroy
weevil and if they are worth $1 each,
or more, per year to tho farm, whf
not import several thousand pains tA
Coloman county’ ’
The cost would not be much—-in
the neighborhood of 25c per pair,
I judge—whi'e the benefits would be
well nigh incalculable.
We need these quail, need thorn
now. Why not import them now?
It seems to me now is the time. >
C. A. WILLIAMS. }
Gossard Corsets
They lace in front
New Fall Models
Shown Here
$2, $3.50, $6,
$7.80
whole area that was later pushed up
to form tho Rocky Mountains. Over
these sands, which were laid down
along the advancing front of the sea,
were deposited the marine sediments
as the sea moved forward. In its
waters lived great numbers of ser-
pent-like swimming reptile?; and over
it soared pterodactyls, the fossil re-
mains of which show that they meas-
ured eighteen feet from tip to tip of
wings. On its shores and in tts wat-
ers sported large diving birds, which
still retained the teeth inherited from
their reptillian ancestors.
On the shores of this sea, especially
along its western margin, great
swamps developed and in them grew
a variety of semitropical plants, such
as palm and fig trees. The resulting
When America
Was Young
Novice News Letter. 1
(Special Correspondence.) / ,
Novice, Oct: 27......W. McNair BfJ
manager of the Novice To^' ^cman’
made a. business trip tti in
Friday. He says he is J
shape to do business
should be done. hing a new
Postmaster Reed is finn , • •
and comfortable addition x '
dence. returned
Miss Nannie Rathmel hat a
to high school at Coleman jjov_
few days’ visit to homefolks
ice. j oats
.Several car loads of cottoi V- -,Hi
r. -iced. m
>nce last report. One car
‘ 1 -
twenty-eight '“Um& of fine seed. At l
he present price, fig- 9
Looks like a trap in ii
(Bulletin U. S. Geological Survey.)
The United States Geological Sur-
vey has just published a report which,
though technical, nevertheless em-
bodies some interesting history of the
early ages of the North American con-
tinent. It tells of the rise and fall of
a portion of the continent millions of
years ago, long before the age of man,
at a time when strange beasts in-
habited the country, when the climate
was subtropical, and when a peculiar
swamp vegetatiotn flourished, the re-
mains of which were donverted into _ __________
♦ -'wLaW * *VaTDamscetfuB mar
lated as peat was
Late in what is termed by geologists coal. The sea <
‘•Carboniferous time,’’ according to maximum six at <
W T. Lee, the author of the report time was the who
, Professional Paper 9g-C), there were der water. The t
mountains in Colorado and New Mex- and the filling of
ico comparable to the present Rocky with each other s
Mountains. During the Tnassic period fossils- which >r
and much of the Jurassic, which fol- shore and coal b<
lowed, a time to be measured in mil- swamps above »
lions of years, these mountans were many positions fi
eroded away. Late in the Jurassic the Upper Creta,
period a wide area 1 hud been worn At the close o
down so near sea level that a slight iod notable chan
subsidence of the land allowed sea in the geography
waUr to enter from the Pacific Ocean interior basin, w
and spread over Wyoming, northern siding througho
Colorado and eastern Utah. Near the period, was now
close of the Jurassic a slight uplift were poured back
Hvrwllcd this sea. After some time the mountains w
New
Idea
Patterns
Get a Fash
ion Sheet
Free
DRY GOODS STORE
from __________^r_
of seed rec^,ntjy shipped contained
twenty-eight
§38 per’ton, f
ures §1,064. ___|________
which to catch t farmer—make him
’ m acreage next year
Vork witli many,
.’.many localities
Wfft P*in(. %-
There arc painters and waiter
Which am 1 going to do? Paint or
wait?
Wh;:h is better?
How much am I worth with my pro*
ry.rty waiting? HrfW much if I paint ?
wiU my house be wolth more or less
if I paint?
Fay it costs §2 a gallon Devon- I
wouldn’t paint anv other—and f3 or
§4 more for putting tt on. That’* $50
or §60 a ten-gallon job.
The money is gone. Is its m the
house? Ia it all in the houset
Suppose I wer# selling; what should
I get for that house fresh-painted and
what should I get for it needing
paint?
I wonder why men paint before
selling! DEVOE,
J. P. Dodson Lumber Company sells
increase his cottc
The scheme will ............... _
Already we read o’ic n‘iany localities
which will increase cotton acre-
ages. :
Misses Elizabeth Lou j{ciltl and
Dixie Mabry, accompanied Vr.
Aderhold of the Novice State l
ty days if the weather remain# good.
‘ Griff Parker, business man of Nov-
ice, and Will White went to Cole
man on business Monday.
Camp Comedy Company Is furnish-
ing amufcement here thia week.
Recent rain# have revived the grass
in this country and the planted grab'
looks fine. More groin is being plant!
4 4
Dr. My rick, a prominent physic is/
of Novice, was taken to the San .tf
tonio asyfum Friday. Hi# frw ‘V-
predict recovery for him. J
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Robson, ^Ar-
and Mrs. D. A. Parker. Clyde Park
er, Miss Celia Parker,-Mr. and Mrs
Mr. and Mrs. 1A. M
He Had Heard.
“Ever been in California?”
“.Nopr. But I know all about what
glorious climate it has.”
moved from these newly lifted moun-
tains the Cretaceous rocks that once
covered them and cut deep enough
into the underlying formations to
Correct.
A pupil in a school in New York
City thus defined the word spine:
“A spine is a long, limber bone;
your head sets on one-end. and you
set on the other.”
UIIV.V ------------ _
level of the sea were lifted to form
mountain tops that how stand mo-c
iv.ui iv.ii4een thousand feet above s a
that thirteen thousand feet above
level.
When Baby^ the Croup.
Wham a piother ^wakened from
sound sleep to find hel child who has
gone to bid apparently^ the best of
health stfcgrimg fo» breath, she is
naturallyalannod. Yet if she cl* keep
her presetce of mind and give ChjWn-
t erlaln’s Ovugh Remedy evapT ten
minutes urfUl vomiting ij^roducejJ.
D. C. Gibson,
San Angelo Fair
JJaveinber 2-6
SPECIAL TRAIN
\ Friday, Nov. 5
A n A A LEAVE COLEMAN 6:17 A. M.
tpZ.UU f A WIVE SAN ANGELO 9:30 A. M
.........Tickets Limit jD^te of Sale.
RoUltd Tfip Special Leaves San Angelo 10 P. M.
Tickets at tU*S Fare on Sale Nov. 1 2, 3, 4, 9, Limited Nov. 7.
Phono 25, that’s all wt
level plain, which then Included ttafhsk of
Bpttigfat» 2 cts Higher in Coleman i
in thisurroumllng tov
If you wist to hold up /h
Sell your Cream to Local Creamery :
thus makingV posslbia for » to rcmaln in your .Ltf town.
DONNELL CREAMERY CO.
Red Cypress Shingles, r«d
a- Poeti, O. K. Ceoient, g^nd
Brick and Lims. f
«uh Coleman has a creamery
market on cream
Butter
ket Price lor Freeh Eggs, Chickens,
tits, Candies, Bananas, Etc. for Sale
Devoe Brand Paints, 1
Building Paper and "j
abliefted
idow Ola*;
wing & Son
1 . Old Coleman National Bank Building
7. P. Dods
Com
| Sac la re
W
if 1 ■
I
»
Tl
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The Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, October 29, 1915, newspaper, October 29, 1915; Coleman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth724062/m1/9/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Coleman Public Library.